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Family Reunion

I can assure you that I strongly support the principle of family unity and I’m glad that there already is a comprehensive framework for refugees and their families to be safely reunited in the UK. The present refugee family reunion policy allows immediate family members of those granted protection in the UK to reunite with them here. The family provisions in the immigration rules provide for relatives with protection in the UK to sponsor children when there are serious and compelling circumstances.

The policy is also clear that where an application fails under the rules, the Government will consider whether there are exceptional reasons to grant leave outside the rules. In addition, refugees with family members in the UK may be eligible for resettlement under the Mandate and Gateway Scheme.

The family reunion policy is designed to provide a safe and legal route for close, dependent family members to join their refugee family in the UK. This avoids the need for family members to make dangerous journeys in order to seek protection. I’m immensely proud that under the existing family reunion policy, over 24,000 family reunion visas have been granted over the last five years. It’s crucial that our efforts are concentrated on ensuring that existing resettlement schemes are used to full effect and that the current rules work properly and effectively. This way we can help those who need it most.

I’ve always been clear that I support the principle of family unity, however I also believe that we must not create perverse incentives for people, particularly children, to leave their families and risk dangerous journeys hoping relatives can join them later.

Thank you once again for taking the time to contact me.

With best wishes.

Kind regards,

Jonathan Lord.

*Angus MacNeil - Private Members Bill - March 2018

With regard to Angus MacNeil MP’s Private Members’ Bill, the Government has said that it’s reflecting on the thoughtful debate around this complex issue and will continue productive discussions in this area. You may be interested to read the Immigration Minister’s comments ahead of that debate below:

“Yesterday marked the seventh anniversary of the start of the war in Syria.

This war has caused unspeakable damage to the country and created a humanitarian crisis on an enormous scale. The UK has been at the forefront of the international response to this crisis, committing £2.46 billion in aid and providing nearly 25 million food rations and over 9.5 relief packages since 2012.

Of equal importance has been the support we have provided to refugees fleeing the crisis. We are already half way towards our commitment to resettle 20,000 people through the vulnerable person's resettlement scheme and have also committed to resettle a further 3,000 people through the Vulnerable Children's Resettlement Scheme.

There are good reasons why we are prioritising these resettlement routes to support the most vulnerable people, such as those who are stuck in refugee camps in Jordan or Lebanon. They provide safe and legal routes for individuals and families fleeing war and persecution to get to the UK. Those who - with all good intention - try to promote and encourage alternative pathways to the UK could be putting the very people they are trying to help in danger. This is the possible outcome if Angus MacNeil's private members bill is allowed to pass through the House at its second reading today.

Mr MacNeil is calling for us to open our family reunion policy to allow refugees to bring many more extended family members to the UK then we currently allow - regardless of whether they need protection, are living in conflict zones, or had even formed a family unit before they left. Widening the remit of the family reunion policy in the way suggested has the real and dangerous potential of creating a perverse incentive for people, particularly children, to have to leave their families and risk perilous journeys, hoping relatives can join them later. The tragic reality is that thousands of people have died trying to cross the Mediterranean, including hundreds of children. Sadly, many of those who do survive the journey can feel they have no choice but to put themselves into the hands of people traffickers who charge them thousands of pounds to smuggle them through Europe. We need to do everything we can to stop these journeys being made.

What is more, by calling for such a change, Mr MacNeil is arguably missing the bigger picture. In total, we granted asylum, resettlement or other forms of protection to nearly 15,000 people last year - nearly 6,000 of whom were children. More specifically in relation to families, we have reunited 24,700 families in the last five years through our existing family reunion route. These figures considered alongside the fact we have established routes within our wider immigration rules to bring family members to the UK and the discretion to do so outside the rules in exceptional circumstances means we already have a comprehensive framework to help families separated by conflict or persecution to reunite.

Finally, the Bill fails to take into consideration that we need to think about where our finite resources are being spent. Local authorities across the UK are doing a fantastic job supporting the thousands of people we are providing protection to. It has been estimated by the National Audit Office that we will spend £1,112 million on the Vulnerable Person's Resettlement Scheme between September 2015 and 2019/20. We want to be able to spend this money on those who need it the most. But extending the family reunion policy in the way Mr MacNeil is calling for may lead to the policy being used by those who do not need international protection in their own right or are not in precarious situations and we could be left with no choice but to divert our finite resources away from this - or other resettlement schemes.

Our priority for now should be concentrating our efforts on ensuring that our existing resettlement schemes are used to full effect and that the current Rules are working properly and effectively. We are focused on making sure we can help as many of those as possible whose needs are greatest. That is why I will not be supporting Mr MacNeil's Bill tomorrow and ask my fellow Parliamentarians to do the same.”